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Improved this page with more examples: Equal, Less and Greater Than Symbols
What do you think?
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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Grammatically I would most probably say John had fewer than 10 marbles since the marbles is a countable noun. ![]()
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Sweet page.
The opening sentence with the parthesis bothers me though because the
parenthesis makes the reading hard. How about:
Sometimes numbers are not the same, and when this happens, we
have symbols to express this. If something is bigger, then the other
thing is smaller, so there is a symbol for this. This is what is looks
like. > Looks like the letter V on its side. You can make the
letter V fall over to the left like >, or you can make the letter
V fall over to the right like <. Then you can put numbers and
really anything you want on the right and left of this funny sideways
V.
igloo myrtilles fourmis
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Grammatically I would most probably say John had fewer than 10 marbles since the marbles is a countable noun.
Ah yes ... the little known "fewer than" sign ![]()
Sweet page.
The opening sentence with the parthesis bothers me though because the
parenthesis makes the reading hard. How about: ...
At your prompting I completely rewrote the beginning of the page ... what do you think now?
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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Pretty good.
As well as the familiar equals sign (=)
it is also very
useful to show
if something is not equal to (≠)
greater than (>)
or less than (<)
Last edited by John E. Franklin (2008-02-11 17:47:01)
igloo myrtilles fourmis
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Thanks!
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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Maybe you could say that if you're using inequalities in algebra you need to flip the symbol if you divide/multiply by a negative number?
Last edited by Daniel123 (2008-02-12 03:46:57)
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I'd say algebraic inequalities deserve a page of their own. That one example at the end is alright because it's a tiny introduction, but after that I'd put a "For more algebraic fun, go here"-type link.
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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Yes,I need such a page.
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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